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Tom Ambrose read history at Trinity College, Dublin, and gained a postgraduate degree at University College, London. He worked in advertising in London and Dublin before switching to producing and directing television documentaries. His first book for Peter Owen, Hitler's Loss: What Britain and mehr anzeigen America Gained from Europe's Cultural Exiles, was widely acclaimed, and Peter Owen subsequently published Godfather of the Revolution: The Life of Philippe galit, Due d'Orlans and Prinny and His Pals: George IV and His Remarkable Gift of Friendship. weniger anzeigen

Beinhaltet den Namen: トム アンブローズ

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TOM AMBROSE read history at Trinity College, Dublin, and gained a postgraduate degree at University College, London. He worked in advertising in London and Dublin before switching to producing and directing television documentaries. His first book, Hitler’s Loss: What Britain and America gained from Europe’s Cultural Exiles was widely acclaimed.

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While certainly not a biography, this history does provide a good overview of George IV's friendships and provides plenty of amusing anecdotes about this singular British monarch. This book is primarily focused on male relationships, so one will need to look elsewhere to read about George's mistresses and his scandalous wife. Overall, this history provides good insight into George's personality and some of his motivations during important points in his life. I'd highly recommend this book to any one interested in regency England.… (mehr)
 
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wagner.sarah35 | 1 weitere Rezension | Aug 10, 2018 |
Beautiful illustrations, nice narrative. It is sufficiently technical that you can understand how the early bicycles worked. And it has a cool picture of Beryl Burton.
 
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themulhern | 1 weitere Rezension | Jul 14, 2018 |
A lot of proofreading errors, and some factual errors, too.

On the positive side, some of the chapters were fairly interesting, and I have to give the guy some credit for taking on the tough job of trying to portray George IV as something other than a dissolute and corpulent buffoon.
½
 
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yooperprof | 1 weitere Rezension | Jun 21, 2014 |
Good for a flip-through. Some nice info on the big racers, like Merckx and Coppi, but just a passing mention of Beryl Burton. What, she doesn't get her own section? He also made the important distinction between the "militant feminists" and the reasonable women that just wanted to ride a bicycle. Sure, Ambrose devotes a lot to how cycling changed women's clothing and the importance of it, but for how actually culturally significant it was, maybe it should get like, more than eight pages? I don't know. He also ends with some Cervélo carbon fiber and Pinarello race bikes, and while that's great for like, CYCLING, what about BICYCLING? Like, to work and shit? Love 'em or hate 'em, fixies have encased a whole different demographic of young people into cycling more; and bicycle commuting is growing each year in major cities across the U.S., leading manufacturers to produce commute-specific cycles. Maybe one of the early examples of a commuter or fixie would be awesome? How about State Bicycle? Lastly, what about the handbuilt, steel-is-real renaissance? Where's Kinfolk? Vanilla? Firefly? There are a lot more interesting things happening in my opinion than a bike that folds up to resemble a garden hose. (Literally, that is the last one, along with a "square-wheeler." Funny? Sure. ACTUALLY the wave of the future? No.) He also doesn't mention Keirin racing, either; he seems very Euro-focused, and bicycles are mostly for transport in Asia for those who can't afford cars (and as China's growing middle class wants cars, the antidote to that segment of the population are the hip kids who can afford them but turn to fixies instead). All in all, something the Weekend Warriors (middle aged white dudes in spandex who ride carbon bikes for half centuries on the Sundays) would nut over. Me, not so much. Vive la velocipedestrienne!… (mehr)
 
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kristinides | 1 weitere Rezension | Dec 24, 2013 |

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